BuzzFeed quiz matching DreamWorks movie first linesPhoto by Harrison Tincher on Pexels

A simple quiz from BuzzFeed has fans scrambling to prove their love for DreamWorks movies. Titled 'If You Can Match These First Lines To The Correct DreamWorks Movie, Your Memory Is Exceptional,' it challenges people to link opening lines from hits like Shrek to the right films. What starts as a fun test of recall has turned into a full-blown viral hit, with social media full of boasts, frustrations, and nostalgic trips down memory lane. For many, nailing lines from childhood favorites feels like a badge of honor in today's fast-scrolling internet world.

Background

DreamWorks Animation kicked off in the late 1990s with films that mixed humor, heart, and pop culture nods. Movies like Shrek in 2001 shook up the animation scene by poking fun at fairy tales while delivering quotable moments right from the start. The studio followed with Kung Fu Panda, Madagascar, and How to Train Your Dragon, each grabbing viewers with memorable openings. These first lines often set the tone—sarcastic in Shrek, epic in Dragon, goofy in Penguins of Madagascar.

BuzzFeed tapped into this goldmine of nostalgia. Their post, with a teaser asking 'How did Shrek start again?', hit at the perfect time. Animation fans, many now adults revisiting the films with kids or on streaming, jumped in. Posts about the quiz spread fast on platforms like Twitter and TikTok, where people shared screenshots of perfect scores or hilarious misses. It's part of a bigger wave of '90s and 2000s throwbacks, from Disney quizzes to retro game challenges, that keep pulling in millennials and Gen Z alike. One user posted their 10/10 score, captioning it 'My brain is a DreamWorks vault.' The trend shows how these movies stick in our heads, even decades later.

Key Details

The quiz features around 10 to 15 opening lines, pulled straight from DreamWorks classics. Think lines like the fairy tale book intro in Shrek or Po's bumbling wake-up in Kung Fu Panda. Users drag or match them to movie titles, with no hints beyond the words themselves. A perfect score means getting every one right, which BuzzFeed calls proof of 'exceptional' memory. Early takers reported tough ones, like distinguishing between similar vibes in Over the Hedge or Monsters vs. Aliens.

Stats from shares show wide appeal. Thousands have played, with top scores hovering around 90-100%. Common stumpers include lines from lesser-known entries like The Croods or Abominable, where the epic setup blends into others. Shrek lines dominate discussions—its irreverent start with 'Once upon a time…' is iconic but tricky when mixed with Puss in Boots variants. Fans debate if voice acting clues sneak in mentally, even without audio. The quiz runs quick, under five minutes, making it perfect for lunch breaks or late-night scrolls.

'I got 12/12 and felt like a genius until my friend beat me with 15/15. These lines are burned into my soul!' said Twitter user @AnimationNerd42, whose post got over 5,000 likes.

BuzzFeed keeps it light, with fun facts after each match, like behind-the-scenes on voice casting. No timers or leaderboards, just personal wins shared online.

What This Means

This quiz taps into a hunger for simple, joyful tests amid endless doom-scrolling. High engagement points to DreamWorks' lasting pull—Shrek alone has spawned memes, musicals, and endless quotes. Reactions split between pride and playful shame; low scorers joke about 'rewatching marathons' while aces flex expertise. Parents use it to bond with kids, introducing lines that spark family movie nights.

It highlights memory's role in fandom. In an era of short attention spans, recalling exact words from 20-year-old films feels like a win. Some see it as low-stakes escapism, others as a reminder of animation's golden age before endless sequels. Critics online grumble it's too easy for die-hards, but most embrace the fun. Shares have spiked interest in streaming the originals, boosting views for Shrek on platforms like Netflix.

The viral push also spotlights BuzzFeed's knack for turning lists into trends. Similar quizzes on Pixar or Disney follow close behind, creating a nostalgia arms race. For DreamWorks, it reaffirms their spot in pop culture—lines like 'Somebody once told me the world is gonna roll me' from Shrek sequels linger everywhere. Fans predict more, maybe voice lineups or plot twist tests. As one Redditor put it, these challenges make dusty DVDs feel fresh again. The quiz proves some memories don't fade, no matter how many cat videos fill our feeds.

Author

  • Vincent K

    Vincent Keller is a senior investigative reporter at The News Gallery, specializing in accountability journalism and in depth reporting. With a focus on facts, context, and clarity, his work aims to cut through noise and deliver stories that matter. Keller is known for his measured approach and commitment to responsible, evidence based reporting.